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— BTF's Preseason Previews Tuesday, April 21, 2009Looking Forward to 2009: Toronto Blue Jays47 Thoughts About the Blue Jays’ Next 147 Games
1. The Blue Jays have played extraordinarily well in the early season, much of the credit going to the offense. 2. I can’t help it, though… every time I see Kevin Millar’s name in the lineup, I want to turn off the TV. I’m starting to moderate my opinion on him, but it will be tough not to boo when he takes the field. 3. If the offense is firing a decent chunk of the credit probably goes to Gene Tenace, who doesn’t often get the credit from the press box but who is a very astute teacher of hitters. Dwayne Murphy helps out there too. 4. Would someone please fix Robert Ray’s neck? 5. Before this season began, I was thinking the Jays would win 75-80 games. I am thinking of revising that number upwards because of the hot start and the fact that some of the hitters appear to be taking a more confident approach, less defensive. 6. When Ricky Romero shut down the A’s so convincingly, Cito couldn’t wipe the grin off his face in the postgame press conference. He is really pulling… Read More ...Looking Forward to 2009: Los Angeles Angels of Anaheimby Los Angeles Waterloo of Black Hawk As sports fans of a certain passion, we are used to deploying words like “disaster” and “catastrophe” where they don’t really belong. When invested in a game we react to each pitch and swing as though the Earth’s very rotation hangs in balance. Though the non-fan may not realize or appreciate our fervor, it serves a useful and very human purpose: we feel a part of something bigger, of a community of fans, players, and coaches. We identify with young men we’ve never met, men with whom we may share nothing in common but the color of a uniform, but men we’ve watched grow and mature and hone their skills to the point where they stand amongst the world’s elite. We cannot match that talent, but we can invest ourselves and our emotions, boisterous applause and righteous anger serving as our tools of participation. And in so participating we share the joys and disappointments of “our” players, and their failures affect us. And so we can freely use the words “disaster” and “catastrophe”, comfortably shielded in a world of metaphor. On the evening of April 8 and morning of April 9, Angel fans were… Read More ...Monday, April 20, 20092009 Preview - Looking Forward to the 2009 Arizona Diamondbacksby dahlian For one month the 2008 Arizona Diamondbacks were the greatest team in all of Care-A-Lot. Their youthful hitting experience combined with a deep rotation and solid bullpen proved more than capable of defeating their foes on their way to a record of 19 wishes granted in opposition to only seven wishes lost. Unfortunately, even in Care-A-Lot some things are too good to be true. While it was obvious to all that the team was granting wishes at an unsustainable rate, there was hope that the .348 overall caring percentage and .468 hugging percentage in April signaled that the young, talented offensive core had turned a corner. Instead, the offense would end the season with a pedestrian .327 OCP and .415 HUG – eighth and seventh in the league, before accounting for the intrinsic caring advantages of their home park. The catcher, Cheer Bear Snyder, first basemen/left fielder Funshine Bear Jackson and shortstop Gentle Heart Lamb Drew ended the season as the only Diamondback regulars that managed to fulfill their caring quota at above average rates (for their assigned tasks). Right fielder Baby Tuggs Bear Upton showed flashes of great empathic potential, but his overall production was hampered by his… Read More ...Tuesday, September 30, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: The 2008 PlayoffsLast year, I reviewed the work of Vinay Kumar in an article at The Hardball Times web site “So Billy, What Does Work in the Playoffs?” about how regular season statistics for a team could forecast its chances of success in the postseason. These showed that we were likely to get a Red Sox vs Cubs or Diamondbacks World Series, with the Red Sox winning it all. Well, I was half right (or two-thirds?). The Rockies challenged the statistical evidence in the NL Championship Series, but lost in the end.So, building on last year's work, let's see how things have changed, and what that forecasts for the 2008 playoffs. The Categories Vinay used 30 categories in his original research. But rather than using the data straight up, he used minimum splits between two teams in order to eliminate about half of the results, to ensure that the data only reflected when a team had distinct advantage over its opponent. The columns below show the winning percentage in each category through 2006, and how the 2007 results changed them. Team totals: through 2006 adding 2007 Won-lost record .581 .600 Runs Scored/Runs Allowed .537 .565 Batting records: Runs scored total .415 .419…Read More ... Thursday, May 01, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Washington NationalsThe Washington Nationals got a new ballpark in DC. That’s about as good as the news is going to get for 2008. They have a good youth movement going in some areas and are still struggling in other areas.
Here are the players:
Catcher – Paul Lo Duca, Johnny Estrada, Wil Nieves
Wednesday, April 30, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Los Angeles DodgersThe Dodgers were in first place in the NL West for the whole month of May last year. They surged over the All-Star Break to gain a two-game lead, and when they beat the Rockies on July 26, they held a 1.5 game lead. They didn’t need to worry about the trade deadline – they were in first, and should be able to hold on to a fight down the stretch. The second place team, the Diamondbacks were playing way over their Pythags. The Padres were hanging around, and the Rockies were 5.5 back, and nary a consideration. Oops. But this is the 50th anniversary (ed.) in Los Angeles, and it’s all going to be different. Right?
The Dodgers were a solid team last year, but really needed someone who could hit home runs, and run the ball down in the outfield. They went and signed Andruw Jones to a two-year contract. Andruw had had a terrible season at the plate – well, home plate at least, so there was no doubt that, at his age, he would regress to his mean. That could mean a 40-50 home run season and lots of RBIs.
Looking Forward to 2008: Philadelphia Phillies (redux)By Kevin Padraic Donnelly: Our original Phillies article was admittedly a little heavy on snark and light on analysis. This is what happens when a couple of Braves fans pick up one of the competitors in the absence of a Phillie-obsessed contributor, I’m afraid. But rather than let his team be slighted (even slightly), one of our regular commentors (and a big Phillie booster) volunteered to re-write the piece. We’re more than happy (nay, even ecstatic at times) to have new contributors volunteer to write for the site. My thanks to Kevin as well as the invaluable contirbutions of Guy Cope (aka Arva) and all of the other volunteers who contributed to this year’s Looking Forwards. —ed Why 2008 is so important The 2008 season will likely define the course of the Phillies franchise for years to come. While the team may seem to be composed of several up and coming players, the core group of Chase Utley (29), Jimmy Rollins (29), Ryan Howard (28) and Pat Burrell (31) are all either at their peaks or on the way down. And while they can hope for more extended playing time from Utley and Howard (132 and 144 starts, respectively, last year),… Read More ...Sam Hutcheson (perhaps some sort of ninja)
Posted: April 30, 2008 at 12:50 PM | 11 comment(s)
Related News: Philadelphia Tuesday, April 29, 2008Looking Forwad to 2008: San Francisco GiantsWithout Barry Bonds, the San Francisco Giants are finally free to make their own destiny. No more trumped up media destiny. No ESPN game breaks to view the team’s former leftfielder. No more chemistry destroying recliner and special treatment. No more federal indictments and perjury charges hanging like the sword of Damocles over the clubs head. No more associates with BALCO. No more reason to watch the worst team in Major League Baseball. Bonds long shadow has been removed, and along with it any semblance of a competitive team. And no matter what you may think of Bonds here at BBTF, the fans in San Francisco loved the slugger. They cheered him at his worst and at his best. He was very much their guy. But now he’s gone, and that will almost certainly affect ticket sales for the Giants as well. They won’t have a chase for the home run record to district them from the lousy product on the field. And what a lousy product it is. The man given an 8 year contract to be the teams ace, Barry Zito instead put up 196 innings of a 98 ERA+. Ray Durham went from a top offensive second baseman… Read More ...Looking Forward to 2008: Colorado RockiesAs thrilling as the 2007 season was for the Rockies and their fans, it was still in a sense unsatisfying, even though it was by far the most successful year in the team’s history. Most surprise winners give their fans an entire summer’s worth of fun, jockeying for the lead in an unexpected pennant race. Think of how exciting the summer of 2006 was in Detroit, or 1984 in Chicago. But as late as the middle of September, the Rockies were still in fourth place in the NL West. They weren’t even getting listed in the daily paper’s Wild Card standings. Then came the famous hot streak, culminating in the exhilarating victory over the Padres in Game No. 163, the sweeps of the Phillies and Diamondbacks in the NL playoffs, and the franchise’s first-ever trip to the World Series. But really, the whole time that any of this even seemed possible lasted just over a month. So the 2008 season opens with the Rockies bearing high expectations of fans who still haven’t seen their team spend a season in contention. The NL West is expected to be a tough division once again this year, but there’s no one there who stands… Read More ...Monday, April 28, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Houston AstrosThe Houston Astro’s have a good example of the owner that wants to win, but that desire slowly hurts his franchise. Much like Peter Angelos of the Balitmore Orioles and the early 90s, late 80s George Steinbrenner, Astros owner Drayton McClain wants to win. He wants to win more than anything else, and he’s willing to do anything to achieve that goal. Consider the ease of which the Astros signed marquee talent like Jeff Bagwell, Craig Biggio, Lance Berkman, Roy Oswalt, Andy Pettite, and Carlos Lee (perceived that way, at any rate) to long term contracts. When it came time to pony up an ungodly amount of money to bring in ace Roger Clemens, McClain did so, and was willing to bend over backwards to make the player comfortable. Though that largesse hasn’t always paid off (Richard Hidalgo), and some players would test the market anyway (Carlos Beltran, Randy Johnson), it was a nice feature for the team to fall back on. Add in McClain’s deserved reputation as a players’ owner, and you the kind of owner that can breed success. It helps, however, for him to be coupled with a strong GM, one who can reign in his owner when… Read More ...Looking Forward to 2008: Milwaukee BrewersPersistence and patience. I make minimal claims as to having many positive attributes, but if pressed I will state that I am both persistent and patient. The former has always been present. The latter has been learned thanks to life’s lessons. I think it’s because of these traits that I identify with Brewers General Manager Doug Melvin or as noted BBTF contributor battlekow calls him, Moustache. Doug Melvin believes in having a plan. I am pretty sure Doug was who the writers of The Hunt For Red October had in mind when they wrote the line, “don’t take a dump without a plan”. The Milwaukee Brewers of today are testimony to both the positive AND negative results that can be generated if an organization develops a plan, stays focused on the plan, stays committed to the plan and executes the plan. When Doug Melvin was hired the Brewers were a mess. The team had just endured its worst season in franchise history, and one of the offensive cornerstones was the immortal Jose Hernandez. Doug quickly recognized that change was needed. Primary in that change was focusing exclusively on acquiring young players. While sending most of the front office packing, Melvin retained… Read More ...Sunday, April 27, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: New York YankeesEven though the Yankee front office has been preaching player development and patience, we here at BTF and Count the Rings™ can’t develop out own talent for anything … so what do we do come preview time? We assemble a bunch of all-stars from elsewhere in the blogosphere. That’s just how we roll.
As for this preview, let’s look at who’s joining me today: Andrew Fletcher of the tastefully named Scott Proctor’s Arm; SG of the aforementioned RLYW; the Yankee blogosphere’s resident curmudgeon, Steve Lombardi of the prolific WasWatching.com; and all three – by accident – of the authors of River Ave. Blues: Benjamin Kabak answering on his own and Joseph Pawlikowski and Michael Axisa splitting their work. So be nice to the panel, and feel free to call us fanboys, homers, haters, or whatever, just don’t call us late to first pitch. And without further ado, here’s… Read More ...Saturday, April 26, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: New York MetsNo team in MLB is looking forward to 2008 as much as the New York Mets are. Perhaps the 1964 Phillies looked as forward to the 1965 season. The Phillies at least had the consolation that there was no Wild Card to simultaneously choke their way out of. The Mets had gone into 2007 after a rough playoff loss to the St. Louis Cardinals in a seven-game NLCS featuring late inning heroics from So Taguchi and Yadier Molina. The Mets then acquired the best pitcher in baseball, Johan Santana, from the Minnesota Twins for a minimal package. So the Mets, and their fans, are really looking forward to 2008. But it isn’t all good times.
Just five days before my birthday, I got an early birthday present: the Mets acquired P Johan Santana from the Minnesota Twins for OF Carlos Gomez, P Phil Humber, P Deolis Guerra, and P Kevin Mulvey.
Thursday, April 24, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Arizona DiamondbacksJim McLennan of the AZSnakePit.Com recently quoted the opening lines from “A Tale of Two Cities” to sum up his feelings on the 2007 Arizona Diamondbacks: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way.” The 2007 Dbacks underachieved and overachieved at the same time: their hitters were worse than expected, their pitching was better than hoped for; their run differential was atrocious, their win total was excellent. They looked like the clutchest clutch gods who ever clutched and the suckiest sucks who ever sucked—sometimes in the same game. Much has been written about the 2007 Dbacks, trying to understand what happened and why it happened; bullpen usage was dissected, pinch hit power was examined, Melvin’s managerial super-powers were proffered—and in the end, it was… Read More ...Looking Forward to 2008: Pittsburgh PiratesDuring that fifteen year period, the Pirates always had some consistency. They would almost certainly have a marquee offensive player, be it Jason Kendall, Brian Giles, or Jason Bay. They always had a promising young arm fronting the rotation, whether it was Denny Neagle, Francisco Cordova, Kris Benson, Kip Wells, or currently, Ian Snell. None of these things mattered, either, as they’d watch top draft pick after top draft pick, names like Sean Burnett, John Van Benschoten, Byran Bullington, Chad Hermansen, and Kris Benson flame out due to injury, ineffectiveness, or sheer mis-draft. All this lead to an inability to find a compliment to those marquee players, and doomed the team. Of course, the organizations inability to consistently benefit from big trades hurt as well. Though management did well on some minor deals, extracting Kip Wells and Josh Fogg from the White Sox for Tod Ritchie, then nabbing those other Sox second baseman of the future Freddy Sanchez for Jeff Suppan, nothing they did could put them over the top. Even brining In Jason Bay, Jack Wilson, and Adam LaRoche underscored how awful the Pirates were at actually developing they’re own talent. A large sign hung over the Pirates, one that… Read More ...Wednesday, April 23, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Seattle MarinersPredicting the future is exceedingly difficult. We all know that. One of our favorite pastimes as a society is to look at old predictions and laugh at how wrong they were. Sure, we should all be driving around in hydrogen-powered flying cars right now, but our past prognosticators didn’t count on the political power of Detroit auto manufacturers, did they? And every baseball writer has lambasted the potential of some team, only to get the ol’ pipe-bomb-in-the-mailbox treatment when that team somehow wins the World Series. Popular culture of the past is riddled with inaccurate versions of the future. George Orwell envisioned a 1984 in which war-mongering superpowers and run-amok governments of the once-free world crushed dissent by any means necessary, and treated as criminals those who didn’t think in perfect lockstep with the dictatorial regime that supervised their every move. In actuality, of course, that didn’t happen until almost twenty years later. Van Halen envisioned a 1984 in which an extremely attractive schoolteacher miraculously decided to fulfill the wildest fantasies of an adolescent boy. Again, that didn’t actually happen until almost twenty years later. And the movie “2001: A Space Odyssey” depicted a 2001 in which--well, I haven’t seen it,… Read More ...Wednesday, April 16, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Philadelphia Phillies...and Alan Honeycutt Witty Introduction: Sam: So.... The Phillies. What say we about the Phillies? Alan: They were in the playoffs last year. Sam: No one cares. Alan: Really? They drew X million fans last year. Sam: If anyone cared, we wouldn’t be writing this. They clearly have no fans. Alan: I think you confuse “an interested fan-base” with “BTF contributors with the bandwidth to write a preview.” Sam: I don’t know any Phillie fans. Therefore they’re aren’t any. QED. Alan: I don’t think it works that way. Sam: Except Sean Forman. Who is a god-man to whom we all owe fealty, and a Phillie fan. That’s the only reason I’m contributing here. So Sean doesn’t kill me with his god-like wrath. Alan: Maybe we should talk about, you know, the team. Sam: Oh, and Brett from work. He’s apparently a Phillie fan. I like Brett. We discussed Baudrillard during training. You don’t get that very often in the States. Todd is from Philly too, but he’s a Red Sox fan for some reason. Todd makes no sense sometimes. Alan: Sean would want us to talk about the actual players. Sam: What’s the point? We could just email Sean and Brett,… Read More ...Sam Hutcheson (perhaps some sort of ninja)
Posted: April 16, 2008 at 04:16 PM | 31 comment(s)
Related News: Looking Forward to 2008: Los Angeles Angels of AnaheimLos Angeles Overview of Anaheim, 2008 Edition 2007 was about as gimme a season as the Angels could expect. They grabbed a share of first place on April 25 and stayed there the rest of the season. Coming into 2008, with Texas and Oakland rebuilding and Seattle offering the only challenge, the defending American League West Champions were the odds-on favorite to take the division for a third straight year. All they had to do was survive Spring Training. In case you’re looking to scroll down and see what happens, they didn’t. Looking Backward 2007 sounds easier than it actually was. The Angels survived despite losing Juan Rivera, who shattered his leg playing winter ball, before the season started (moral of story: don’t break leg). Garrett Anderson lost half his season due to a hip flexor and nagging hurts to his back and left hamstring. Bartolo Colon was a Kazaam-sized disaster. Chone Figgins broke a finger and lost a month. Howie Kendrick broke two fingers and lost two months. Bullpen rock Scot Shields suddenly turned into a late-season pumpkin. Mike Napoli lost near 50 games due to hamstring and ankle issues. No sweat. The trademark depth and that powered the team… Read More ...Monday, April 14, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Minnesota TwinsThe Minnesota Twins ended their 6 year run of winning seasons in 2007, dropping 17 wins to a 79-83 record. During the previous five years, the Twins had been one of the model franchises in baseball, winning 520 games with an average payroll less than $60 million a year. Almost all the team’s key contributors came from one of the games strongest farm systems, and oh, what a farm system it was. It produced several MVP Candidates , including four who played a key role for the team in Joe Mauer, Justin Morneau (who won it), Torii Hunter, and Corey Koskie (check out his 2003 season, all that and gold glove defense), and one who would win two World Series in Boston (doh!). It produced a multitude of good pitchers, including long time vet Brad Radke, Kyle Lohse, and a number of top notch relievers. GM Terry Ryan also had a knack for finding free talent during the early days, snagging Johan Santana in the Rule 5 draft, grabbing David Ortiz for the remains of Dave Hollins, and Jason Bartlett for the never used Brian Buchannan, and seeming to never make a mistake when trading a veteran for prospects. Much as… Read More ...Looking Forward to 2008: San Diego PadresWhat do we know about the Padres? Thanks to the assertions of experts who apparently believe that their beliefs bear some resemblance to reality, we know a few things:
What’s interesting is that when enough people repeat these tales, they become embedded in our collective consciousness and we find ourselves nodding in agreement. Then some jerk comes along and presents actual data. In a blinding flash, what we know no longer makes sense. Some people will blame the jerk for disrupting their blissful slumber, while others will continue to make their original assertions, perhaps a bit more loudly in the belief that an argument’s validity is solely dependent on the force with which it is delivered. Then there will be a few who survive the initial jolt and realize that the truth doesn’t hurt as much as they thought it would. It’s less like a punch to the gut and more like jumping into a cool stream. Once they start swimming around in it, they’ll discover it’s not so bad and some may actually come to enjoy the experience. I’m assuming that if… Read More ...Friday, April 11, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Toronto Blue JaysMany of the Zips projections will seem pessimistic to Jays fans. Assuming normal luck with injuries Zips sees the Jays scoring somewhere around 770 runs. That’s not going to be enough.
However it’s worth noting that the projections in the Bill James Handbook see the same guys producing about 90 more runs (a remarkable difference considering that both systems tend to be conservative) and that should be enough to keep the team in contention – though I’d expect them to fall just short even so.
Worth noting: Last year no team in the AL had the platoon advantage less frequently than the Jays. I don’t see that as likely to change this year. The team construction isn’t substantially different from last year. In an odd sort of way I approve though. It’s sort of the flip side of not carrying any lefty one out specialists. By using so many good right-handed hitters you kind of challenge the way the… Read More ...Looking Forward to 2008: Cincinnati RedsThe Cincinnati Reds are an organization that has been on the cusp of contention the past two years, never quite making it over the top. In 2006, after 5 years of futility under Dan O’Brien and Trader Jim Bowden, the Reds hired former Twins assistant GM Wayne Krivsky to take over the struggling franchise. Coming in with a strong scouting background from a successful team known for its player development, Krivsky brought a wave of optimism from Minnesota. The optimism looked warranted at the beginning of the season. The division was weak, and the Reds stayed in contention the whole way. The first major move of Krivsky’s tenure was a resounding success, dealing from depth by sending talented but inconsistent outfielder Wily Mo Pena to the Boston Red Sox for middle of the rotation starter Bronson Arroyo. Arroyo responded with his best season, putting up a 142 ERA+ over 240 innings, all while pitching in the Great American Bandbox. Krivsky’s next move was to steal talented but inconsistent middle infielder Brandon Phillips from the Cleveland Indians. Phillips responded well to a full time job, slugging 17 homers and putting up an impressive triple slash line .276/.324/.427 that belied his 88 OPS+… Read More ...Wednesday, April 09, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Atlanta Bravesby Sam Hutcheson and Alan Honeycutt Alan: It was a relatively quiet and predictable offseason, don’tcha think? Andruw’s exit via free agency was obvious before the start of last season (insert joke here about him leaving a year early). I think we all suspected that the siren song of Tom Glavine, free agent, was going to prove irresistible for a team that had just suffered through 56 starts by Buddy Carlyle, Kyle Davies, Jo-Jo Reyes, and Lance Cormier (when the best of your 4th and 5th starters has an ERA over 5.20* and Tom Glavine walks into your office, it doesn’t take long before you’re jumping on him like he’s wearing TAG body spray). The only major move with any hint of surprise was the Renteria trade. *Yes, I’m ignoring the fact that some guy named Jeff Bennett actually had two useful starts last year in September because they were erased from my memory before the end of the month. Sam: Yep. This ain’t brain science or rocket surgery. Everyone knows what went wrong last year, right? The Atlanta Braves didn’t win the division for two very simple reasons. First, Mike Hampton got hurt again. Second, Andruw Jones sucked. If either… Read More ...Sam Hutcheson (perhaps some sort of ninja)
Posted: April 09, 2008 at 07:19 AM | 18 comment(s)
Related News: Atlanta Tuesday, April 08, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Tampa Bay RaysWhy the Rays are Better than The Yankees...right now(in certain important facets of the game) Those of us who recall the dying days of the Soviet Union - perestroika, the shockingly successful Lithuanian independence movement, the ecstatic rupture of the Berlin Wall - know the surprising satisfaction of an Evil Empire’s fall. (Those too young to remember the Soviet chill and the pointless atomic bomb drills in junior high school can consider the sudden downfall of Emperor Palpatine and his Galactic Empire.) Certainly, in the immediately previous years few predict its demise. Reagan’s Berlin plea to “tear down this wall” was widely panned by liberal publications, especially in skittish Europe, and the destruction of the rebel base on the ice planet Hoth looked like a death knell for rebel resistance against the Galactic Empire. Baseball's New York empire poached Jason Giambi, Johnny Damon, Roger Clemens, Randy Johnson, and other superstars from rivals, which, a the time, seemed ominous signs of the Yankees’ limitless funds and continued dominance. Today, the Yankees are wounded (Pettitte, Matsui) and staggering (Mussina, Giambi) and have the misfortune of playing in what is still baseball’s most difficult division. To be sure, the Yankees’ talent prompts some… Read More ...Tuesday, April 01, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Boston Red SoxMy dad did not make it through another baseball season. He was barely coherent enough to sense that another Opening Day had arrived, and the ancient, reflexive brain stem which had kept him alive through an accelerating flurry of health issues fired one more salvo—rekindling, however briefly, his roiling hatred of the New York Yankees that had sustained him for more than six decades.The last day he was conscious—June 15th—I showed him the sports page. His fingers flickered over the standings and he made out that the Red Sox were running away with things in the AL East. He smiled. Only a few moments later, he lapsed into a coma. The Red Sox kept things together well enough after a very fast start, coasted into the playoffs, and found their second wind, bringing off a virtual replica of their 2004 post-season. Much of this was accomplished by an approach that might be the one distinguishing “old” sabermetrics from “new” sabermetrics—assuming, of course, that there’s any way to know if such a distinction, in fact, actually exists. Whatever the case, the Red Sox shaved off nearly 170 runs from their opponents in 2007, much of that difference occurring in two key… Read More ...Saturday, March 29, 2008Looking Forward to 2008 - St. Louis CardinalsWhere to start? Well, first, let's everyone take a nice, deep breath. It is extremely unlikely, although possible I suppose, that the Cardinals will only win 70 games and finish last. Last year, they finished right about .500. They have lost three of their veteran core players (Eckstein, Edmonds, and Rolen), but all three were hurt last year, and none of them played really up to par when they were in the lineup, and none of them pitches. The team has replaced Rolen with Troy Glaus, which should involve little loss from last year's playing level, and they have a good plan to replace Edmonds. Shortstop and leadoff man aren't really covered yet, but David Eckstein wasn't all that great at either job last year. So no, I don't see any disasters here.That's not to say that there are no problems. The next four paragraphs are the end of my 2007 Final Update last October:
"I wrote the above yesterday, and let it sit on my computer until today so I could proofread and clarity check with fresh eyes. So guess what happened? Right. Walt Jocketty got fired. The Cardinals are calling it a voluntary parting of the ways, but…Read More ... Thursday, March 27, 2008Looking Forward to 2008 - Detroit TigersGOING FOR BROKE2007 In Review After a spectacular rise in 2006, the 2007 Detroit Tigers were competitive right out of the gate. They held on to first place from late July to early August and looked very good with the league’s second best offense. They actually were a ½ game up as late as August 14 when the long collapse occurred. The club tumbled to a11-20 record down the stretch. This dropped the team to disappointing 88 wins, 8 games behind the Cleveland Indians and 6 games behind the Yankees for the Wild Card. What Went Right • Curtis Granderson had a breakout year. • Magglio Ordonez had career year offensively. • The offense overall - incredible performances of Tiger stars (Granderson, Polanco, Ordonez, Sheffield and Guillen) led the team offensively – good for second in the league in runs scored, despite the dead weight of Monroe, Casey and Inge. What Went Wrong • IRod continued his offensive decline. • The club couldn’t find a productive hitter at first base (again), while recent cast-offs Carlos Pena and Dmitri Young had career years. • Brandon Inge had an off-year at the plate. • Pitching: Neither Verlander or Bonderman took the next… Read More ...Tuesday, March 25, 2008Looking Forward to 2008: Cleveland IndiansIf this year’s version of the Cleveland Indians looks familiar, that’s because it is. As the rest of the contenders in the American League Central completely overhauled their rosters, Mark Shapiro was content to add a utilityman here and a relief pitcher there while keeping the core of the team intact. It’s a strong core; the Tribe boasts the reigning American League Cy Young Award winner (C.C. Sabathia), a second starting pitcher (Fausto Carmona) that was every bit as good as Sabathia in 2007, one of the best center fielders in baseball (Grady Sizemore), and a catcher (Victor Martinez) who puts up .300/.375/.475 seasons like clockwork. Indeed, that core of players took the 2007 Cleveland Indians to the brink of the World Series. The optimist will look at this team and point out that it won 96 games and a division title last season while getting no contribution whatsoever from second base (.639 OPS), left field (.719 OPS), and right field (.760 OPS). The optimist will also point out that the 2007 Indians tied for the best record in baseball despite getting nearly 30 starts from Cliff Lee and Jeremy Sowers with a combined ERA of 6.34. If and when these… Read More ...Trevor Crowe T. Robot (Dan Lee)
Posted: March 25, 2008 at 12:12 PM | 12 comment(s)
Related News: Cleveland Monday, April 23, 2007Looking Forward to 2007 - Atlanta BravesMany thanks go to Alan Honeycutt, one of the usenet mafia, for contributing his assistance in this preview. And more thanks go to Sam (and Chris for the last one), for updating their previews while I was unable to get into the Control Panel to post them. -DSAs you're probably aware, in 2006 the Braves failed to win their division for the first time in, like, 4-EVAH. The recap, as haiku: In time, all leaves fall. Jorge Sosa: Antichrist. Autumn winds in June. What went wrong: Jorge Sosa. June. What went right: Adam LaRoche. Brian McCann. What shimmering hint of Summer's Country did glint the hearts of men: John Smoltz eluding his shadow once more. What is to come, as heroic couplet: The Gods of Old, arisen new again Reitsma, Remmy banished from the pen O'er lands where evil hence all hope waylaid Men of skill once more shall ply their trade. Okay, so the iambs are a little jiggered. Squint and look askance. It's a baseball site for God's sake. What we fear: Mark Redman. Edgar Renteria's "range." What we're looking forward to: Kelly Johnson. Brian McCann. The darkness that doth shutter the hearts of men: Gorgorath, Devourer of… Read More ...Sam Hutcheson (perhaps some sort of ninja)
Posted: April 23, 2007 at 09:52 PM | 82 comment(s)
Related News: Atlanta Looking Forward to 2007 - New York MetsThe 2007 New York Mets Preview The 2006 New York Mets were everything, well, almost everything, a fan wants out of a season. And after not making the playoffs for six seasons, it was welcome. Moreover, the Mets ended the Braves run of division titles, beating them soundly –not squeaking out by one or two games, but leaving the Braves at eighteen games behind and below 0.500. The Phillies were the closest challengers, but weren’t really challengers at all after about mid-August. Once September rolled around, the only question was whether or not the Mets could clinch the division earlier than the 1986 team. Even with the best record in baseball, the Mets’ season wasn’t a product of outrageous performances. Carlos Beltran rebounded from his worst season ever to have his best season ever, but his performance was in line with his projected growth curve. The starting pitching was, um, not good. Tom Glavine was a bright spot and John Maine pitched well, but Pedro Martinez, after a strong start, really went downhill fast. The bullpen was superb, but Billy Wagner had one of his “down” seasons despite being very good. It’s hard to tell if pitching coach Rick Peterson can… Read More ...
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